Canadian Manufacturing

Mitacs program trying to help Canadian SMEs to emerge stronger post-pandemic

by CM Staff   

Financing Research & Development Small Business Public Sector COVID-19 education finance small and medium businesses


Mitacs' initiative will provide opportunities for post-secondary interns to support businesses and organizations in all sectors.

Mitacs helping small businesses in the manufacturing industry with their program.

VANCOUVER — Small businesses across Canada grappling with the impact of COVID-19 are getting support from an unexpected resource: top post-secondary students.

The Mitacs initiative — available to all small- and medium-sized enterprises and not-for-profit organizations with fewer than 500 employees — offers a significant cost reduction to an intern’s stipend. Qualifying partner organizations contribute only 25 per cent of the intern’s $10,000 or $15,000 stipend for the first four months of an innovation project done in collaboration with a post-secondary institution instead of the usual 50 per cent. Mitacs interns are available to support business, not-for-profit, hospital, and municipal innovation in all sectors — everything from manufacturing, agriculture, arts and entertainment, and energy, to healthcare, technology, tourism and utilities.

“Through this effort, we are simultaneously helping Canadian small- and medium-sized businesses to grow and innovate, and our country’s up-and-coming top talent and researchers to secure valuable employment opportunities in spite of a challenging job market caused by COVID-19,” said Mitacs CEO Dr. John Hepburn in a company press release.

“Both SMEs and academic talent are integral to Canada’s economic recovery, and Mitacs is committed to making the connections needed to help Canadian organizations solve their business issues, remain competitive, and thrive.”

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Since the start of the pandemic, more than 2,000 businesses — about 70 per cent of which are SMEs — partnered with Mitacs for the first time.

“We have the tools, connections, and solutions that small businesses need to navigate the current economic challenges, and we’re seeing firsthand how many of those companies that take advantage of working with us are thriving,” Hepburn added.

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